Nevada gaming regulators need to get tough, in a hurry. The state’s Gaming 
Control Board takes great pride in being strict enforcers of the rules that 
govern Nevada gambling. And they are – for the most part. But the meteoric 
growth of the poker business has blinded the gaming industry’s cops, and 
they seem unable to deal with the new realities that have accompanied the 
rise of Internet poker. Playing poker online for money is illegal in Nevada, 
according to state law, and the federal government says it is illegal 
everywhere in the United States, a stance the online poker business hopes 
the courts will overturn. Nevada gaming regulators originally took a tough 
stand against Internet poker. They forced prospective gaming license 
applicants to sell their ownership stakes in online casinos. They prohibited 
poker tournaments in state casinos from licensing online poker rooms to 
conduct official satellite tournaments that send winners to play in Nevada 
events. They did so because almost every top Web poker room accepts bets 
from the United States, including Nevada. Regulators considered the poker 
Web sites to be lawbreakers. That was when the online poker business was 
still relatively small. But after Tennessee accountant Chris Moneymaker 
parlayed his $40 PokerStars satellite victory into a (non-officially 
sanctioned) entry into the 2003 World Series of Poker championship event at 
Binion’s Horseshoe and took down the top prize of $2.5 million, the online 
business exploded. Online poker sites ran countless commercials on the 
dozens of hours of televised poker shows available each week.
The revenue stream fueled more poker TV shows. With Moneymaker’s win and the 
TV exposure, Web poker boomed, as did revenue in Las Vegas poker rooms and 
the tournaments they held.
The World Series of Poker championship event drew 839 entries in 2003, a 
number that jumped to 2,576 in 2004, 5,519 last year and is expected to 
reach 8,000 or more this year.
Those skyrocketing numbers have been driven by online sites.
One week ago PokerStars held a single online satellite tournament that will 
send an incredible 234 players into this year’s WSOP $10,000-entry 
championship event. Dozens of other sites will send thousands more entrants.
What I find astonishing is that the Gaming Control Board allows the 
properties hosting major poker events to ally themselves so closely with 
poker Web sites that invite players to break the law.
At the WSOP, now under way at the Rio, Harrah’s sold official hospitality 
rooms just steps away from the poker competition to several online poker 
rooms: Doyle’s Room, Bodog and Ultimatebet. Other sites rent luxurious 
suites at the host hotel, the Rio.
. . .
From the felt tops of the WSOP poker tables, which feature a PartyPoker 
logo, to World Series media director Nolan Dalla, also a top spokesman for 
PokerStars, the incestuous relationship between legal Nevada casino poker 
and illegal online poker has never been clearer.
Harrah’s can get away with the close partnerships because the online 
operators use their Web sites’ “dot net” suffix, meaning that they call 
themselves by the names of their “educational” sister sites that offer free 
play instead of poker for money.
Ultimatebet.com, where you can bet, with a wink becomes Ultimatebet.net, 
where you can’t. So Harrah’s isn’t technically partnering with illegal 
operators, and regulators aren’t technically allowing a rule-breaking 
partnership.
Control Board Chairman Dennis Neilander says the distinction between the 
dot-coms and the dot-nets matters and that regulators don’t see a problem 
with the dot-net marketing at the WSOP.
He’s wrong. The dot-net distinction shouldn’t make a difference. Nevada 
casino operators shouldn’t be partnering with illegal online casino 
operators – or their shadow sites.
It’s time for Nevada regulators to say enough is enough and prove they still 
have the backbone to stand up to the big money of online casinos.
